It’s 7pm on a Saturday. Your restaurant is fully booked, you’re three-deep in the kitchen, and your phone rings. Nobody can get to it. By the time someone checks the voicemail an hour later, the caller has booked at the restaurant next door.
This is a completely solvable problem. Here’s what’s actually worth doing about it.
The Options, Ranked by Effectiveness
Option 1: Hire a dedicated phone person
Pros: Handles everything, can manage complex requests, genuinely good customer service.
Cons: $40,000–55,000/year for a part-time role. They can’t answer the phone when they’re doing something else. High turnover in hospitality.
Reality check: Most small NZ cafés and restaurants can’t afford this. And even if you could, a dedicated phone person is overkill for a 40-seat restaurant that gets 15 phone calls a day.
Option 2: Online booking only
Pros: No phone calls to manage. Bookings come in through a system and you control availability.
Cons: Significant portion of your market — particularly older diners, Chinese and Indian communities, and anyone making a decision on the day — will still try to call. If they can’t get through, they book somewhere else.
Reality check: Online-only works for some restaurants in high-demand areas. For most NZ cafés and suburban restaurants, it’s leaving money on the table.
Option 3: Voicemail with a same-day callback commitment
Pros: Costs nothing.
Cons: Callback rates from voicemails for restaurants are low. Most callers who don’t get an answer will try the next restaurant on their list rather than waiting.
Reality check: This is what most places do. It’s better than nothing but it’s the most expensive option in terms of lost bookings.
Option 4: AI phone answering
Pros: Answers every call, 24 hours a day, collects the booking information and notifies you immediately. No salary, no holidays, no turnover.
Cons: Requires setup (30–60 minutes). Some callers will know they’re talking to an AI. Configuration needs to be right or it handles requests awkwardly.
Reality check: This is now a legitimate option for small NZ hospitality businesses at approximately $79–$149/month. Technology has advanced enough in the past 18 months that the experience is genuinely usable.
What Good AI Phone Answering Looks Like for Hospitality
The setup matters enormously. Here’s what works:
The greeting:
“Thank you for calling [Restaurant Name]. This is [AI name], our reservations assistant. I’ll take a few details and we’ll have someone confirm your booking shortly.”
Keep it under 15 seconds. Don’t explain the AI — callers don’t care.
What it collects:
- Name
- Phone number (critical)
- Number of people
- Date and time preference
- Any special requirements (dietary, occasion, accessibility)
What happens after the call: Within 30 seconds, you receive an SMS or email: “Booking request: James, 4 people, Saturday 8pm, birthday celebration. Callback: 021-xxx-xxxx.”
You call back, confirm availability, take the booking. The call was handled. The caller felt acknowledged.
What it doesn’t do: The AI doesn’t check your availability calendar and confirm on the spot (unless you have a direct integration with your booking system). It collects and notifies. You confirm. This is actually fine for most small operators.
The Setup Process
For a standard restaurant setup:
Information gathering (20 minutes): What are your typical booking hours? What’s your capacity? What are the common dietary requirements you need to know about? What should callers know about your restaurant (location, parking, dress code)?
Configuration (30–45 minutes): Building the conversation flow, setting up the notification delivery (SMS to your number), testing with different scenarios.
Go live: You can set call forwarding from your existing number, or publish a new number specifically for reservations.
Most providers will do this for you as part of the setup. The whole thing takes under two hours.
The Numbers Worth Calculating
Before deciding, work out what a missed booking actually costs:
- Average cover value at your restaurant: say $45
- Average party size: say 3 people
- One missed booking: $135 in food and beverage revenue
If you’re missing 3 calls per week that would have resulted in bookings: $405/week = $21,000/year.
An AI phone answering service at $149/month: $1,788/year.
The math is usually simple. Even one additional booking per week covers the entire year’s cost.
What to Look For in a Provider
NZ phone number. You want a local number (09 for Auckland, 04 for Wellington, 03 for Christchurch). Overseas numbers look unfamiliar to callers and reduce answer rates.
SMS notification speed. You need to know about a booking request within 30 seconds, not hours. Test this explicitly before signing up.
Language capability. For Auckland, Mandarin/Cantonese support matters — a significant portion of the dining market is Chinese-speaking and having an AI that can handle both English and Mandarin is a genuine differentiator.
No per-minute billing. Fixed monthly pricing is easier to budget. Per-minute billing creates anxiety about how many calls you’re getting and whether you’re going over.
Trial period. Any provider worth using will let you trial for 7–14 days. Use it during your actual operating hours and call it yourself 10 times with different scenarios.
Common Concerns
“Our regulars will hate it.” Most regulars who call during service are calling for the same reason everyone else is — to make a booking or ask a question. They don’t mind talking to an AI if it handles their request quickly. If you have regulars who specifically want to speak to you, you can configure the system to recognize your frequent callers’ numbers and offer to transfer.
“What if it gives wrong information?” Configure the AI to say exactly what you tell it to say. It shouldn’t be making up your opening hours or quoting prices. The configuration should be conservative — if it doesn’t know something, it should say “Let me transfer you to someone who can help” rather than guessing.
“I’ll lose the personal touch.” The AI handles the collection of information. You handle the relationship. The 90-second booking confirmation call is not where your personal touch lives anyway — it’s in the dining experience itself.
The Practical First Step
If this sounds relevant to your restaurant, the fastest way to evaluate it is:
Track your missed calls for one week. How many voicemails do you get? What proportion result in callbacks? What proportion of callbacks result in bookings?
Calculate the cost: missed bookings × average cover value × booking conversion rate.
If that number is above $150/month, an AI phone answering service will pay for itself within the first month.
Most operators who do this exercise are surprised by the number. The missed calls cost more than they thought.